JSTOR offers a high-quality, interdisciplinary archive to support scholarship and teaching. It includes archives of leading academic journals across the humanities, social sciences, and sciences, as well as select monographs and other materials valuable for academic work. The entire corpus is full-text searchable, offers search term highlighting, includes high-quality images, and is interlinked by millions of citations and references. MEDAILLE ONLYFULL TEXT

LEXIS/NEXIS Academic Universe Search system of databases containing full text articles from newspapers, medical journals, and law reviews; company and business news and financial reports; accounting, auditing and tax sources; federal and state case law, codes, regulations and more. MEDAILLE ONLYFULL TEXT

PsycINFO (Available through EBSCOhost) Contains citations and summaries of international journal articles, book chapters, books, dissertations, and technical reports, in the field of psychology and the psychological aspects of related disciplines, such as medicine, psychiatry, nursing, sociology, counseling, education, pharmacology, physiology, linguistics, anthropology, business, and law. Produced by the American Psychological Association. MEDAILLE ONLY

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CyberCrime Computer Crime and Intellectual Property Section of the Criminal Division of the U.S. Department of Justice. Contains information and links about computer crimes, including federal policy, cases, laws, reports, manuals, news and more.

National Criminal Justice Reference Service Information from the National Criminal Justice Reference Service (NCJRS) includes a searchable abstract database,reports on crime, juvenile justice, corrections, the courts, crime prevention, law enforcement, drugs, victims, etc.

New York State Criminal Justice Indicators Statistics and other information on crime, adult arrests, felony prosecutions, convictions, and sentences in New York State through 1999. Data is also available by NYS region and county.

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When writing a research paper, it is important to correctly cite the sources you use in order to avoid plagiarism and give credit for any ideas you have borrowed. Depending on your field of study and your professor's preference, you may be asked to use one of a variety of different citation styles with different rules about formatting, in-text citations, and references/works cited pages.

This box is designed to help direct you to some of the most common citation styles you will encounter as a student, including basic examples and print and Web resources to consult if you need more in-depth information. Please mouseover the Citation Styles tab above or choose your style from the list below:

CHICAGOThe Chicago Manual of Style has evolved over 100 years and 16 editions to become the main rule book for writers from many different academic disciplines, including the humanities, sciences, and social sciences, of what is commonly referred to as a footnote or endnote format of writing.The online version of the 16th edition of the manual includes the style’s rules, along with a “Chicago Style Q&A” feature, and is updated to reflect rules for the preparation of electronic and digital formats such as e-books and web publications.